CalArts’ Alum Combines ‘Glitch’ Imagery and Textiles

In recent years, “glitch art”—art created through digital or analog mistakes—has become a more growing aesthetic. Artists corrupt digital code or physically manipulate electronic devices (called “circuit bending”) to create images, sound and more.

These blankets are layered with irony: a digital photographic image, made with an intentionally broken (rewired) camera, is mechanically woven or knit into a photoblanket. In this project, a keepsake for cherishing one’s memories now becomes a platform for fashioning corrupted memory, the cold logic of digital systems into soft, warm blankets.

The project is related to Stearns’ tumblr blog Year of the Glitch, which is a yearlong “glitch-a-day” project that explores various manifestations (intentional and unintentional, staged and found glitches) in the form of images, animated gifs and even sound files. Stearns draws the daily art from a range of sources: prepared digital cameras, video capture devices, electronic displays, scanners, manipulated or corrupted files, skipping CDs and disrupted digital transmissions.

“These images are not of broken things, but the unlocking of other worlds latent in the technologies with which we surround ourselves,” writes Stearns on his blog. “Part of what this project is about is approaching the familiar with fresh senses, to turn it into something that is unfamiliar.”

Stearns’ glitch textiles are proving to be popular, with his recent Kickstarter campaign raising about $8,500 above his projected goal.

Below, Stearns discusses the roots of this electronic art form in the recent PBS Off Book web series episode, The Art of Glitch.

24700 is CalArts' online space dedicated to sharing news and work of the larger CalArts community from around the world. The blog captures stories of the exploration of new forms and expressions in the arts by our students, faculty, staff and alumni.